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Contexts and Strategies. How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?. Need paper and pencil/pen. Spelling Test. Clear desks. No voices. Find your own space. Pencil and paper. Number 1-10. RICANING VERNALIT MOISSANT POKERSON FAVORIAL.
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Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?
Spelling Test • Clear desks. • No voices. • Find your own space. • Pencil and paper. • Number 1-10.
RICANING VERNALIT MOISSANT POKERSON FAVORIAL YRULPZOC OZHGPMTJ DLEGQMNW CFUJXZAQ WXPAUJVB PSEUDOWORDS
Compare and Contrast • Tell me about column 1 • Examples of patterns • Tell me about column 2 • Why are we able to make sense of the one column of words.
Internalized knowledge of letter patterns. • We can identify a word in about as much time as it takes to identify a LETTER. • Have a visual context for words. • What is visual about taking a spelling test. • In Word Matters…how would a child learning to manuscript their name and doing related word and reading and writing (drawing) activities throughout the year…ho
SYNTATIC CUES (pg 198.) • WORD ENDINGS • RIDING/RIDDEN • CONSTUCTION (N); CONSTRUCTIVE(ADJ); • FUNCTION WORDS: A, THE, THAT THOSE, HER, IT • The man was chased by at cat down the lane. • WORD ORDER • Carol kisses the monkey. The monkey kisses Carol.
SEMANTIC CUES • MEANING OF THE SETS OF WORDS • Define • Examples • How affects reading and writing for reading. • (Same for Graphic (phonemic) and syntactic)
THE BEAVER (cloze) • American Indians call beavers the “little men of the woods.” But they (1)___really so very little. (2)___beavers grow to be (3)___ or four feet long (4)___ weigh from 30 to (5)___ pounds. These “little men (6)___ the woods” are busy (7)___ of the time. That (8)___ why we sometimes say, “(9)___ busy as a beaver.” • (10)___ know how to build (11)___ that can hold water. (12)___ use their two front (13)___ to do some of (14)___ work. Cutting down a (15)___ with their four sharp-(16)___ teeth is easy. A (17)___ can cut down a (18)___ 4 inches thick in (19)___ 15 minutes. • (BE ABLE TO EXPLAIN YOUR THINKING AS YOU DO A CLOZE PROCEDURE. Why do CLOSE PROCUDURE EITHER as teacher modeling or student completing an oral procedure or as a written independent)
WORD 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 CUE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
CONTEXT & CUESAs we read we monitor… • PRIOR KNOWLEDGE (OUR schemes) • BEFORE CONTEXT (sentence or word or paragraph) • AFTER CONTEXT (same) • SEMANTIC • SYNTATIC • Graphic (phonemic) • SOCIOPSYCHOLINQUISTIC? Explain • (self-correct as you read; using above strategies )
What we do as we read.(meta-cognitive strategies)What one does when one readsTeachers model for children 1. Predict (what text will be about): e.g., Look at illustrations, titles, headings, beginning sentences… 2. Sample text: reading 3. Clarify (does what I am reading make sense, if not I use one of the strategies.) 4. Confirm or Correct and move on.
WHAT DOES A PROFICIENT READER DO? • Describe characteristics of a proficient reader? • Describe characteristics of a beginning or novice reader?
Page 28 • Teaching Strategy for reading
Part to Whole; Whole to Part • Compare and contrast whole to part; part to whole methods of teaching reading. • If a child is asked to tell me what reading is….How will the child describe reading part to whole? Whole to part?
TEST Reading for next time.
Word Solver: dynamic readingUsing Words in reading and writing.Teacher modeling the process(not just memorizing lists) • Is a cognitive/thinking process for recognizing words, taking them apart, putting them together so that children can read and write with MEANING. • The learner actively investigates how words work. Knowing that how words are constructed and used bring meaning to text. ( ed, er, th, pronouns, see list in back) • Through reading experiences, children build a dynamic vocabulary exploring word meanings and making connections. • The greater the speaking vocabulary, the easier it is for them to learn new words.
continued • Individual vocabulary will build double and triple with a variety of writing and reading experiences. • Competent readings will have a variety of of word solving strategies to use as they read….they will use these with little noticable pause.
Page 25 • Example 1 reading • There was only one dog left • Example 2 writing • Teacher creates mini lesson to help child or group on a skill, in this case how to figure out how to write a word • Example 3 Word study • Wrote out sets of words with endings for personal journal or word wall
Framework for teaching reading and writingIs this sociopsycholinquistic ? • Language Experience • Read –Aloud Time • Shared Reading (writing) • Writers workshop • Independent writing • Interactive writing • Independent writing • Describe an reading and writing activity for each of the above. Site page no. Can use Word Matters.
QUIZ T OR F7 minutes • 1. The text recommends 2 to 2 ½ hours of integrated language arts activities (reading and writing) each. • 2. Shared reading is child and teacher reading together using enlarged text. Text may contain repetitive words. • 3. A word wall is an effective method to organize words for children to use for independent writing or reading. A word wall may organize words according to the alphabet or by endings. • 4 Ineffective reading/writing strategy: A teacher using letter/ alphabet books to help students investigate words. • What was the strategy called that we did at the beginning of class. • As teachers sometimes we may want to draw certain words to a child’s attention and sometimes we would not want to interrupt reading. Using ideas from Word Matters, Explain.